Conformational Entropy Effects on the Desorption Kinetics of

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Langmuir 2002, 18, 9799-9809

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Conformational Entropy Effects on the Desorption Kinetics of Polyethers from Graphite Kris R. Paserba, Nithya Vaidyanathan, and Andrew J. Gellman* Department of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213 Received June 9, 2002. In Final Form: September 26, 2002 The desorption kinetics of a series of poly(ethylene glycol)-dimethyl ethers (PEG-DMEs, CH3(OCH2CH2)nOCH3, n ) 1-22) adsorbed on graphite have been measured to study the detachment of flexible linear heteropolymers from solid surfaces. Desorption rates were measured using temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and indicate that the desorption of the PEG-DMEs from graphite can be described using a first-order rate constant and a desorption barrier, ∆E‡des, that is independent of adsorbate coverage. The average pre-exponent of the first-order desorption rate constant was measured to be vav ) 1018.8(0.7 s-1 and is roughly independent of the PEG-DME oligomer chain length. In addition the ∆E‡des scales nonlinearly with the oligomer chain length and can be represented by the expression ∆E‡des ) a + bNγ (where N ) 3n + 3), with the exponent assuming a value of γ ) 0.46 ( 0.01. A simple theory generates an analytical expression for the measured values of ∆E‡des that accurately reproduces the measured nonlinearity of ∆E‡des(N). The measured value of ∆E‡des is determined by the difference in the average energy of the adsorbed state, 〈E〉, and the average energy of the transition state to desorption, 〈E‡〉. The nonlinear dependence of the ∆E‡des on chain length can be ascribed to conformational entropy in the adsorbed state. For long oligomers entropy favors conformations of the molecule that are partially detached from the surface at elevated temperatures and thus the average energy of the adsorbed state is quite different from that of the minimum energy configuration.

1. Introduction The statics and dynamics of macromolecules adsorbed on solid surfaces are of both theoretical and practical interest because polymeric films are capable of modifying interfacial properties in a controlled manner. The growing interest in polymer adsorption onto solid substrates is due to their critical role in numerous industrial and biological applications such as stabilization of colloidal suspensions, paints and coatings, biomaterial compatibility, and lubricant coatings on magnetic recording disks. The function of thin polymeric films is intriguing because these films represent examples of two-dimensional matter that can exhibit physical and dynamic properties that are dramatically different from their bulk phase properties. In addition, the behavior of adsorbed macromolecules can be much different from that of small adsorbates on surfaces. The most notable factor contributing to the differences in the behavior of adsorbed macromolecules and that of small molecules is the large number of configurations that macromolecules can adopt at an interface. As a result, intense research efforts have focused on understanding the statics of adsorbed polymers and the effects of molecular conformation on basic properties such as film thickness, coverage, and segment density distribution in the near-surface region.1,2 The results of these studies provide a comprehensive description of adsorbed polymer layers under equilibrium conditions. Although the equilibrium properties of polymers at surfaces have been studied extensively, in many cases * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ag4b@ andrew.cmu.edu. (1) Fleer, G. J.; Cohen Stuart, M. A.; Scheutjens, J. M. H. M.; Cosgrove, T.; Vincent, B. Polymers at Interfaces; Chapman and Hall: New York, 1993. (2) Kawaguchi, M.; Takahashi, A. Polymer Adsorption at Solid Liquid Interfaces. Adv. Colloid Interface Sci. 1992, 37 (3-4), 219-317.

adsorbed polymer layers do not reach an equilibrium state. The dynamics of macromolecules under nonequilibrium conditions are just as important as their equilibrium properties but have been much less thoroughly studied. This is especially surprising because the morphologies of adsorbed polymer materials are often governed by kinetic rather than equilibrium parameters.3 For example, the kinetics of order-disorder transitions within adsorbed polymer films have a significant impact on phenomena such as polymer evaporation or desorption from surfaces. This is important in determining the rate of evaporative loss of lubricants from the surfaces of magnetic storage media, a process that generally leads to a substantial decrease in wear durability. As another example, oligomer desorption from catalyst surfaces represents the final step in the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis of high molecular weight hydrocarbons. All of these represent examples of oligomer or polymer desorption processes from surfaces. The vast majority of measurements of molecular desorption kinetics from surfaces have used relatively small species for which the desorption process is considered simply as a displacement along the surface normal. This desorption mechanism can be adequately modeled using a single well-defined reaction coordinate for motion over a simple one-dimensional potential energy surface describing the interaction of the molecule with the surface. In many such studies of series of homologous compounds the energy barriers to desorption, ∆E‡des, have been found to scale linearly with the chain length. For example, the desorption of n-alkanes (N ) 6-12) from the Au(111) surface was studied by Wetterer et al. using helium atom (3) Douglas, J. F.; Schneider, H. M.; Frantz, P.; Lipman, R.; Granick, S. The origin and characterization of conformational heterogeneity in adsorbed polymer layers. J. Phys.-Condens. Matter 1997, 9 (37), 76997718.

10.1021/la026049v CCC: $22.00 © 2002 American Chemical Society Published on Web 11/14/2002

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reflectivity.4 Their conclusions from that study indicate that the desorption energies, ∆E‡des(N), increased incrementally by 6.2 ( 0.2 kJ/mol per methylene unit. A recent study by Bishop et al. has reported segment-surface interaction energies of ∼8 kJ/mol per methylene group for n-alkanes (N ) 6-10) adsorbed on Pt(111).5 This was the first study to suggest that the ∆E‡des(N) might not be truly linear in chain length, but the limited range of the chain lengths used makes it difficult to determine the functional form of this nonlinearity. Needless to say, it is not surprising that over the limited range of chain lengths used in all such studies, ∆E‡des(N) would appear to be linear in chain length. In contrast with the desorption of small molecules, the description of the desorption of a long flexible molecule from a surface must take into consideration the fact that the molecular structure has many degrees of freedom that provide many energetically equivalent pathways leading to desorption. The combined contributions of these pathways must influence the overall desorption reaction kinetics and the ∆E‡des that one measures for such species. In a previous report we presented the results of a study of the desorption of n-alkanes (CNH2N+2) from graphite that was the first to use a set of oligomer chain lengths, N ) 5-60, broad enough to allow observation of a nonlinear dependence of ∆E‡des on N.6-8 In fact, ∆E‡des was found to obey an offset power law of the form ∆E‡des ) a + bNγ where the exponent had a value of γ ) 0.50 ( 0.01. In addition, we were able to propose a mechanism for the desorption process and a model for the energy and the entropy of the oligomers on the surface. The model yields an analytical expression for the measured values of ∆E‡des(N) that provides an extremely good quantitative fit to the data. Those results revealed that the nonlinear dependence of ∆E‡des on N can be attributed to the conformational isomerism or conformational entropy of the adsorbed oligomer that causes some fraction of the chain segments to be detached from the surface at any temperature above absolute zero. On the basis of the model proposed for the desorption of n-alkane oligomers from graphite, it can be reasoned that the desorption kinetics of similar long chain molecules might be influenced by conformational entropy in the adsorbed state and thereby show a nonlinear dependence of ∆E‡des on chain length. We have chosen to investigate this possibility by measuring the desorption kinetics for a set of seven poly(ethylene glycol) dimethyl ether oligomers [CH3(OCH2CH2)nOCH3, n ) 1 to ∼22] from graphite. These molecules will be referred to in this paper as PEGDMEs. Desorption rates were measured using temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and indicate that desorption of the PEG-DMEs can be described using a first-order rate constant and a ∆E‡des that is independent of coverage. The average value of the pre-exponent of the first-order rate constant was measured to be vav ) 1018.8(0.7 (4) Wetterer, S. M.; Lavrich, D. J.; Cummings, T.; Bernasek, S. L.; Scoles, G. Energetics and kinetics of the physisorption of hydrocarbons on Au(111). J. Phys. Chem. B 1998, 102 (46), 9266-9275. (5) Bishop, A. .R.; Girolami, G. S.; Nuzzo, R. G. Structural models and thermal desorption energetics for multilayer assemblies of the n-alkanes on Pt(111). J. Phys. Chem. B 2000, 104 (4), 754-763. (6) Paserba, K. R.; Gellman, A. J. Kinetics and energetics of oligomer desorption from surfaces. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2001, 86 (19), 4338-4341. (7) Paserba, K.; Gellman, A. J. Effects of conformational isomerism on the desorption kinetics of n-alkanes from graphite. J. Chem. Phys. 2001, 115 (14), 6737-6751. (8) Gellman, A. J.; Paserba, K. Kinetics and mechanism of oligomer deosrption from surfaces: n-alkanes on graphite. J. Phys. Chem., submitted for publication.

Paserba et al.

s-1 and is roughly independent of the PEG-DME oligomer chain length. As in the case of the n-alkanes, the values of ∆E‡des scale nonlinearly with the oligomer chain length and can be represented by the expression ∆E‡des ) a + bNγ (where N ) 3n + 3) with the exponent having a value of γ ) 0.46 ( 0.01. As in the case of the alkanes we have proposed a mechanism for the desorption process and a model that accounts for the energy and entropy of the adsorbed PEG-DME oligomers. This model generalizes that for the alkanes to heteropolymers with more than one type of backbone bond. Once again this yields an analytical expression for the measured values of ∆E‡des that provides an extremely accurate, quantitative fit to the observed nonlinear chain length dependence of ∆E‡des. The model explicitly accounts for contributions to the free energy of the two distinct types of chemical segments that form the PEG-DME backbone (the C-C and O-C bonds). The results of our modeling of PEG-DME desorption confirm our previous suggestion that conformational entropy plays a significant role in determining the desorption kinetics of oligomers from surfaces and suggests that the desorption of all such flexible linear oligomers occurs through a common mechanism. 2. Experimental Section All experiments were conducted in a stainless steel ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) chamber with a base pressure of 10-9 Torr achieved through use of an ion-pump and titanium sublimation pump. TPD experiments were performed using an ABB Extrel Merlin quadrupole mass spectrometer (QMS). This instrument has a mass range of 1-500 amu and is capable of simultaneously monitoring up to five masses as a function of time during a TPD experiment. The substrate used was a 12 × 12 × 2 mm piece of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). Prior to mounting, the sample was cleaved in air to expose the basal plane. The graphite was then mounted on a square piece of tantalum foil that was ∼0.25 mm thick using electrically conductive silver epoxy purchased from the Aremco Co. Two tantalum wires were spotwelded to the rear of the tantalum foil and mounted to the end of a manipulator capable of x, y, and z translation and 360° rotation. Once mounted, the graphite could be cooled to ∼120 K through mechanical contact with a liquid nitrogen reservoir at the end of the manipulator. In addition, the graphite substrate could be heated resistively at a constant rate using a computer to provide proportional-derivative temperature control. The temperature of the tantalum foil was measured using a chromelalumel thermocouple spot-welded to its rear face. The temperature of the graphite sample was assumed to be that of its tantalum foil mount. A set of monodisperse PEG-DMEs (CH3(OCH2CH2)nOCH3, n ) 1-4) were purchased in purities of >99.0% from Fluka Chemicals. Relatively monodisperse PEG-DMEs (n ≈ 8, 10, 22) each having polydispersity